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Catarina Macario making her case as ‘the future’ of USWNT

Catarina Macario strikes the ball during a training session in Japan this summer. (Brad Smith/ISI Photos/Getty Images)

Less than a year after making her debut with the U.S. women’s national team, Catarina Macario is becoming a prominent player in the eyes of Vlatko Andonovski.

The coach named Macario as an alternate on the Olympic roster this summer in Tokyo. The 22-year-old didn’t see the starting lineup as the USWNT rebounded from a disappointing start to win bronze. Two months and a couple of camps later, however, Andonovski says Macario could become the face of the squad.

“It’s no secret Cat is one of the players who has tremendous potential,” Andonovski said. “I personally think she is one of the players I call the future of this team.”

The coach has been playing her primarily in the midfield, where her movement with the ball and runs without the ball have recently been on display.

Macario also excels at scoring goals, but she hasn’t yet had the opportunity to prove what she’s capable of with the national team. After tallying seven goals in her last seven games with her club, Lyon, as well as 63 goals in 69 matches through her three-year college career with the Stanford Cardinal, Macario has a strong case to start at forward for the USWNT and, more specifically, at the nine.

The 4-3-3 formation Andonovski typically employs also leaves more room for Macario to earn a starting spot if she can establish herself as a forward. As a first-year player, it’s difficult to compete with the likes of Julie Ertz and Rose Lavelle in the midfield. But with Carli Lloyd retiring after the USWNT’s next two friendlies against Korea Republic, a spot will be left open on the starting forward line.

Considering Andonovski’s high praise of Macario’s performance in the midfield, she seems headed toward success regardless of position.

“She’s a very creative player in the role she has with the national team,” the coach said. “It’s just been growth from game to game.”

Macario has three goals in 10 appearances with the U.S. With Lyon, she’s recorded 13 goals in 21 games.

That she is already making a name for herself in her first year as a professional and senior national team player isn’t anything new for the Brazilian-born striker. At Stanford, Macario racked up 17 goals and 16 assists in 25 matches her freshman year, earning her many awards such as espnW Player of the Year, TopDrawerSoccer.com Freshman of the Year, Pac-12 Forward of the Year and Pac-12 Freshman of the Year.

In her third and final college season, Macario buried 23 goals in just 19 matches.

Macario, a two-time Hermann Trophy winner as college soccer’s best player, decided to forgo her senior season to begin her professional journey. On Jan. 12, she signed with Lyon for two and a half years.

January turned out to be quite a month for Macario, 21 years old at the time. The day after her contract with Lyon was made public, U.S. Soccer announced she had received clearance from FIFA to play for the U.S. as a dual citizen.

Four days later, on Jan. 18, Macario made her debut for the national team against Colombia. In her next game on Jan. 22, also against Colombia, she made her first start and scored her first international goal. She followed that up with inclusion on the USWNT’s 2021 SheBelieves Cup and Olympic rosters and a highlight-reel goal in a U.S. friendly last month.

“I still feel relatively new to this team,” Macario said in September. “But I do know some of [the players] a little bit better now, so I hope that we learn more about each other on and off the field and build confidence in playing with each other.”

Macario will have another chance to realize her potential when the USWNT plays South Korea on Thursday night in Kansas City and again on Tuesday in St. Paul, Minn.

“I’m very happy with where she’s at at this stage in her career,” Andonovski said. “I’m always excited to have her in camp.”

Jessa Braun is an editorial intern for Just Women’s Sports. She is also the Head of North American Content for the Women’s Sports Alliance. Follow her on Twitter @jessabraun.

Aryna Sabalenka Narrowly Escapes Emma Raducanu in Cincinnati Open Battle

Defending champion No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka follows through on a backhand during her narrow Round of 32 victory over No. 39 Emma Raducanu at the 2025 Cincinnati Open.
No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka needed more than three hours to defeat No. 39 Emma Raducanu at the 2025 Cincinnati Open on Monday. (Robert Prange/Getty Images)

Tennis fans saw an epic battle on Monday, as world No. 39 Emma Raducanu forced No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka into a third-set tiebreak in the third round of the 2025 Cincinnati Open.

The British 22-year-old, who burst into the sport's upper echelons by winning the 2021 US Open as an unseeded teenage qualifier, came achingly close to ousting the top-ranked three-time Grand Slam winner in a match that required more than three hours and two tie-breaks to resolve.

"She's world No. 1 for a reason, and I pushed her more than I did at Wimbledon so that's an improvement," said Raducanu, ultimately falling to the 2024 Cincinnati Open winner in Monday's narrow 7-6 (3), 4-6, 7-6 (5) loss.

Clearly affected by the oppressive humidity of the southern Ohio summer, Sabalenka took risks in the match's late stages to offset her 72 unforced errors and her diminishing energy.

"At the end, I went for crazy shots," Sabalenka told the crowd following the 2025 US Open tune-up match. "I think that it was a little bit risky from me and it really helped to put a lot of pressure on her."

Along with Sabalenka, this week's Round of 16 will feature at least four other Top-10 contenders, as 2025 Australian Open victor No. 6 Madison Keys and Kazakhstan's No. 10 Elena Rybakina booked their own Round of 32 wins on Monday, while 2025 French Open champion No. 2 Coco Gauff and 2025 Wimbledon winner No. 3 Iga Świątek enjoyed extra rest as their third-round opponents withdrew due to illness and injury on Tuesday.

Hoping to join the Gauff and Keys's advancing US contingent are No. 4 Jessica Pegula and No. 35 Ashlyn Krueger, who will face Poland's No. 40 Magda Linette and Italy's No. 9 Jasmine Paolini, respectively, on Tuesday.

How to watch the Cincinnati Open

Tennis's best will keep battling for Cincy's trophy — and an edge going into the season's final Grand Slam — this week: The third round will wrap on Tuesday before the Round of 16 kicks off on Wednesday.

Live coverage of the 2025 Cincinnati Open will continue airing on the Tennis Channel.

Injured Fever Star Caitlin Clark Talks WNBA Ratings Pressure on Sue Bird Podcast

Injured Indiana Fever star Caitlin Clark stands in front of the bench during a 2025 WNBA game.
Injured Indiana Fever superstar Caitlin Clark has missed 19 of her team's 32 games so far this season. (Sean M. Haffey/Getty Images)

Indiana Fever superstar Caitlin Clark is feeling the pressure, joining retired WNBA legend Sue Bird on last Friday's podcast to discuss the impact of her recent spat of injuries on league attendance and viewership.

"That's definitely been hard," Clark told Bird about having to ride the bench. "I'm going to go to every road game no matter what, whether I'm playing or not. It's hard because obviously I do feel this responsibility of being out there and playing."

"I sign autographs for way longer when I'm hurt than when I'm active," Clark told Bird, referencing her outsized popularity. "That's never something I wish for, but I still want to make as much time as I can for people."

In total, Clark has missed 19 of the No. 5 Fever's 32 regular-season games — plus this year's Indianapolis-based All-Star Game — as she manages three separate muscle injuries.

Before her injuries, Indiana's 2025 season opener pit Clark against fellow WNBA sophomore Angel Reese and the Chicago Sky earned what is still this year's highest viewership, with 2.7 million people tuning in on May 17th.

Since then, all three rematches have seen the regional rivals face off without one or both of their popular 2024 draft picks.

Despite star absences, however, ratings are up across all WNBA teams, with national networks averaging 794,000 viewers per game through July — a 21% increase over 2024's full-season average.

Golden State Valkyries Debut Violet the Raven Mascot

The Golden State Valkyries debut their new mascot Violet the Raven during an August 2025 WNBA game.
Golden State Valkyries mascot Violet the Raven will be a mainstay in Ballhalla going forward. (Noah Graham/NBAE via Getty Images)

The mysterious large purple egg stashed inside the Bay Area's Chase Center has hatched, revealing the first-ever mascot for the Golden State Valkyries: a bespectacled raven named Violet.

Violet made her official mascot debut during the No. 7 Valkyries' 74-57 Monday win over the No. 13 Connecticut Sun, with the Golden State crowd welcoming her by singing "Happy Birthday."

"Ravens are commonly known as Valkyries' helpful and savvy counterparts in Norse mythology," the 2025 WNBA expansion team wrote in Tuesday's press materials, also noting that "because she is near-sighted, she sports gold glasses helping her achieve the excellent eyesight that ravens are known to have."

Nicknamed "Vi," Violet will bring "crucial knowledge [from her daily flights] back for the leaders of Ballhalla to use in battle."

Violet will now join other mascots in the league's spotlight, with teams seeing significant success from the popularity of WNBA-specific characters — sparked by the 2021 debut of New York Liberty icon Ellie the Elephant.

"The cultural phenomenon that Ellie has become today definitely exceeded our expectations," Liberty chief brand officer Shana Stephenson told Andscape last season. "She's become such an integral part of our game-day experience that the energy and atmosphere within our game I don't think would be the same without Ellie."

Chicago has also undergone a mascot revamp recently, replacing the team's old Sky Guy mascot with Skye the Lioness last year.

How to catch Violet the Raven at Golden State

Fans hoping to meet the Valks' new mascot will have a shot on Sunday, when Golden State returns from this week's road trip to host the No. 3 Atlanta Dream in the Chase Center at 8:30 PM ET, airing live on NBA TV.

Wings Rookie Paige Bueckers, Teammates Back Dallas Coach Chris Koclanes Amid Skid

Dallas Wings rookie Paige Bueckers high-fives head coach Chris Koclanes during a 2025 WNBA game.
Dallas Wings head coach Chris Koclanes and rookie star Paige Bueckers are staying faithful despite the team's recent losing streak. (Jess Rapfogel/Getty Images)

Currently on a five-game losing streak, the No. 12 Dallas Wings — and star rookie Paige Bueckers — are trusting the process, hunting an upset as they take on the No. 5 Indiana Fever on Tuesday night.

"I think we have a really good young core, we have great pieces to build around, good complementary pieces," Bueckers told reporters on Sunday. "We're all really excited that the front office has doubled down on who we have here right now. I think that's what we're gonna build around."

"We've talked about it enough," the 2025 No. 1 overall draftee continued. "We need to put action behind our words."

First-year Dallas head coach Chris Koclanes has taken much of the heat for the Wings' skid, exiting the court to fans chanting "We want Nola" — a plea for assistant coach Nola Henry to take over the team.

"Stepping into this leadership role, [I'm] being challenged to step outside of character at times and when to hold people accountable in different ways and when to discipline in different ways, so I'm learning," said Koclanes, whose role with the Wings is also his first-ever stint as a head coach — at any level of the game.

"You know we didn't start the season off well, we're not playing how we should be playing. But we need the fans to support us," Dallas forward Myisha Hines-Allen said, directly addressing upset fans after the Wings' Friday loss to the No. 2 New York Liberty.

"At the end of the day, Chris is still our head coach. We still need him."

How to watch the Dallas Wings vs. Indiana Fever on Tuesday

The No. 12 Wings head to Indiana to take on the No. 5 Fever at 7:30 PM ET on Tuesday, airing live on ESPN.

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